It is well known that laypersons and practitioners often resist using complex mathematical models such as those proposed by economics or finance, and instead use fast and frugal strategies to make decisions. We study one such strategy: the recognition heuristic. This states that people infer that an object they recognize has a higher value of a criterion of interest than an object they do not recognize. We extend previous studies by including a general model of the recognition heuristic that considers probabilistic recognition, and carry out a mathematical analysis. We derive general closed-form expressions for all the parameters of this general model and show the similarities and differences between our proposal and the original determinis...
Decision makers are often called on to make snap judgments using fast-and- frugal decisionrules call...
In a series of three experiments, participants made inferences about which one of a pair of two obje...
The recognition heuristic uses a recognition decision to make an inference about an unknown variable...
It is well known that laypersons and practitioners often resist using complex mathematical models su...
The ‘fast and frugal ’ approach to reasoning (Gigerenzer, G., & Todd, P. M. (1999). Simple heur...
The recognition heuristic exploits the basic psychological capacity for recognition in order to make...
The recognition heuristic is a prime example of how, by exploiting a match between mind and environm...
It has been proposed that recognition can form the basis of simple but ecologically rational decisio...
“Fast & frugal” heuristics represent an appealing way of implementing bounded rationality and decisi...
The recognition heuristic is a noncompensatory strategy for inferring which of two alternatives, one...
Inferences consistent with “recognition-based” decision-making may be drawn for various reasons othe...
Marketing science seeks to prescribe better marketing strategies (advertising, product development, ...
The recognition heuristic models the adaptive use and dominant role of recognition knowledge in judg...
The recognition heuristic is claimed to be distinguished from notions of availability and fluency th...
Purpose – People often face constraints such as a lack of time or information in taking decisions, w...
Decision makers are often called on to make snap judgments using fast-and- frugal decisionrules call...
In a series of three experiments, participants made inferences about which one of a pair of two obje...
The recognition heuristic uses a recognition decision to make an inference about an unknown variable...
It is well known that laypersons and practitioners often resist using complex mathematical models su...
The ‘fast and frugal ’ approach to reasoning (Gigerenzer, G., & Todd, P. M. (1999). Simple heur...
The recognition heuristic exploits the basic psychological capacity for recognition in order to make...
The recognition heuristic is a prime example of how, by exploiting a match between mind and environm...
It has been proposed that recognition can form the basis of simple but ecologically rational decisio...
“Fast & frugal” heuristics represent an appealing way of implementing bounded rationality and decisi...
The recognition heuristic is a noncompensatory strategy for inferring which of two alternatives, one...
Inferences consistent with “recognition-based” decision-making may be drawn for various reasons othe...
Marketing science seeks to prescribe better marketing strategies (advertising, product development, ...
The recognition heuristic models the adaptive use and dominant role of recognition knowledge in judg...
The recognition heuristic is claimed to be distinguished from notions of availability and fluency th...
Purpose – People often face constraints such as a lack of time or information in taking decisions, w...
Decision makers are often called on to make snap judgments using fast-and- frugal decisionrules call...
In a series of three experiments, participants made inferences about which one of a pair of two obje...
The recognition heuristic uses a recognition decision to make an inference about an unknown variable...